A Mermaid by John William Waterhouse - 1900 - 96.5 x 66.6 cm Royal Academy of Arts A Mermaid by John William Waterhouse - 1900 - 96.5 x 66.6 cm Royal Academy of Arts

A Mermaid

oil on canvas • 96.5 x 66.6 cm
  • John William Waterhouse - April 6, 1849 - February 10, 1917 John William Waterhouse 1900

Waterhouse’s paintings often depicted figures from literature or Greek mythology. It’s possible that this work was inspired by Alfred Lord Tennyson's 1830 poem The Mermaid, which includes the lines:

Who would be
A mermaid fair,
Singing alone,
Combing her hair

The poem goes on to describe the mermaid seeking and finding love among the mermen. Waterhouse was also interested, however, in the darker mythology of the mermaid as an enchantress. Mermaids traditionally were sirens who lured sailors to their death through their captivating song. They were also tragic figures; they couldn’t survive in the yearned-for human world and men could not exist in their watery realm, so any relationship was doomed. There are no sailors in Waterhouse's painting; despite being a siren, the mermaid is depicted as a rather lonely figure. Beside her is a shell filled with pearls, which some believed to be formed from the tears of dead sailors.

P.S. Not only mermaids were feared by men! Here you can read about Victorian feminist icons and their supernatural powers. Beware!